Also mirroring Trump's move, China's tariffs will be deployed in
two waves - the first covering $34 billion worth of goods coming
in early July.

The Chinese tariffs are focused on energy and agricultural
products, covering goods including ornamental fish, whiskey, and
coal. By singling out certain goods, the Chinese are also hitting
some states harder than others.

To break down the effect by state, Business Insider used US
Commerce Department data to determine the number of
tariff-eligible goods from each state sent to China in
2017.

Because of the US database's limitations, the totals
include some foreign-sourced goods that may not be subject to
China's tariffs. Those goods represent a small portion of the
overall values.

Additionally, the database measures exports using a system
called Origin of Movement. This measures where exports are sent
from rather than where they are produced. While research shows
that Origin of Movement can be a solid proxy for production, the
Census Bureau may provide an undercount for some upstream
producers.

For instance, some farmers in the Midwest ship their
soybeans to Louisiana for transport, which increases the count
for Louisiana. Given the fact that Louisiana still relies on the
shipping and sales for its economy, the data is still helpful to
evaluate the pain from the tariffs - but it may undercount the
lost value to some upstream producers.

There are eight states that exported more than $1 billion
worth of tariff-eligible goods to China in 2017:

Texas: $8,022,380,040

Louisiana: $6,627,390,388

Washington: $5,231,988,100

California: $4,560,897,434

Alabama: $2,620,256,485

South Carolina: $2,588,390,677

Illinois: $2,123,222,976

Kentucky: $1,006,565,148

Many of these states have just a handful of goods that make up
most of the coming pain.

Similarly, for Alabama, $1.9 billion of the state's $2.6 billion
in tariff-eligible goods is small-engined vehicles.

In Texas, the biggest hit will come from crude oil (the state
sent $3.7 billion worth to China last year) and propane; the
state shipped $1.7 billion worth of that to China last year.